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Afghanistan/South Asia
Sindh Governor collected thousands from British Welfare
2005-06-14
Pakistan last year was in a 4-way tie for the coveted 132nd position on the Transparency International corruption list. Tied with Cameroun, Iraq, and Kenya, Pakistan is assessed as more corrupt than Niger, Sudan, or Bolivia, but not quite as corrupt as Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, and Ivory Coast.
Sindh Governor Ishratul Ibad collected 1,000 pounds a month in income support, plus other benefits, from Britain's social security system for 10 months, after he was named to his lucrative post, the Sunday Telegraph newspaper reported. The weekly paper said Ibad, a doctor by training, "lives in a mansion in the state capital while being waited upon by servants and chauffeured in Mercedes limousines". Back in London, however, Ibad continued to receive 1,000 pounds a month in income support, from the time he was appointed governor in December 2002 until October the following year, the newspaper said. In addition, it said, he received taxpayers' money to cover the 1,057 pounds monthly rent on his semi-detached home in northwest London. His wife, meanwhile, got benefits for having been diagnosed with a stress disorder, enabling Ibad to claim payments as her care-giver, it said.

Khan had come to Britain in 1992 as an asylum seeker, The Sunday Telegraph said. Seven years later he was awarded refugee status, enabling him to tap into a range of social security benefits. He returned to Pakistan, however, to be appointed governor of Sindh in December 2002 by President Pervez Musharraf, who had assumed the office of head of state the year before after taking power in 1999 in a bloodless coup. Confronted by The Sunday Telegraph, Khan - a one-time Pakistani housing minister - said he had repaid "a few hundred pounds" and that he was keen for any outstanding money to be reimbursed. Andrew Dinson, a member of parliament for Prime Minister Tony Blair's Labour Party, whose Hendon constituency includes the Khan's house in London, called for an immediate inquiry. "I would be very surprised if the rules allowed this," he was quoted as saying.
Posted by:Omoluger Ebbatle8086

#2  If he has a house in london, I don't see a problem. Call the REPO man.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2005-06-14 11:41  

#1  So.....what's this again about Mr. Blair wanting the U.S. to contribute more toward aid for Africa?
Posted by: Bomb-a-rama   2005-06-14 10:40  

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